Understanding Place: A Reassessment of the Built Work of Giancarlo De Carlo in Urbino, Italy Mark A. Blizard, RA MD, Associate Professor The University of Texas at San Antonio, San Antonio, Texas ABSTRACT While regionalism and placed-based strategies have returned to the forefront of the design discourse in the United States––gaining acceptance as a part of sustainable practice and shaping academic curricula––the work of Giancarlo De Carlo has remained curiously in the margins. Although much has been written about the Milanese architect over the years, little is available in English. In history books, his accomplishments are limited to a few references: along with Alison and Peter Smithson, De Carlo was an important member of Team X following the general disillusionment with the CIAM and its Athens Charter. De Carlo’s initial study of Urbino (1964) is held up as a model for its consideration of place, social discourse and the role of the architect. Later, he emerged as an advocate of participatory design. Although both a writer and an educator, he left no singular treatise and was seemingly uninterested in theoretical pursuit as an end in itself. His built work, however, remains vital today––not just as a historical milestone, but for the lessons and insight that it offers. It is the purpose of this paper to gather and propose a codification of De Carlo’s understanding of place and its import to shaping architectural design. For De Carlo, design was a complex practice of back and forth negotiations between landscape (city–region–culture) and provisional design responses, each tested through the analytical process of “reading the territory”. Using a modern architectural language, he sought continuity of cultural forms through a placed-based design response that structured continued change while reinforcing the identity of its place. In support, this paper draws from the few writings that analyZe his approach to design, his sources and influences, as well as from the author’s direct analysis of De Carlo’s built work in Urbino, Italy. Discussions with architects Antonio Troisi and Monica MaZZolani––both of whom collaborated with De Carlo and continue his practice––provide additional insight and clarity. KEYWORDS: Architecture, Social Space, Reading the Territory, Giancarlo De Carlo, Design Practice 1.0 INTRODUCTION Spontaneous Architecture, an exhibition of rural Italian building curated by Giancarlo De Carlo, EnZo Cerutti, and Guiseppe Samona at the 1951 Milan Triennale, was a condensation of a number of ideas that De Carlo was considering at that time including approaches to design that emerged from a direct confrontation with post-war economic and social realities. On one hand like the more well-known exhibition Architecture Without Architects (Rudofsky 1965) it was a celebration of vernacular traditions and the unknown craftsman. However, beyond its surface of photographic images and written descriptions it posed “a viable model for contemporary urbanism” that stood as an alternative to the CIAM’s Athens Charter (Sabatino 2010, 172). Spontaneous Architecture served as a starting point. It outlined the ideas, elements and forms that were to occupy De Carlo throughout his career. Perhaps equally formative of his architectural practice, was the analytical study and discourse that centered around Matera in Basilicata, Italy, at the same time. Matera also marked a point of departure in Italian architecture, prompting a broad reassessment of the tenants of European Modernism. In the wake of Carlo Levi’s seminal book, Christ Stopped at Eboli (1945), Matera became a contested terrain and the central figure in a morality play––a controversial reassessment of the balance between tradition and moderniZation.1 A thorough analysis of the social, economic and physical structures was conducted by a team of sociologists, urban planners, and architects. The results of the study then informed the design of a number of new neighborhoods where the population of Matera was relocated. By most measures La Martella and the other planned communities that formed a web surrounding the traditional city, were failures. Throughout the process, however, De Carlo and the other designers made a close examination of the traditional city, its fundamental elements, and its spaces for social interaction. What emerged was a sense that spontaneous architectural expression was closely calibrated to its environment and inextricable from its dense cultural fabric. It was in Matera that De Carlo began his systematic “search for an architectural expression matching the local environment, and at the same time, tuned with the spirit and ideas of contemporary civilization” (Toxey 2011, 137). This concept evolved over his career through the iterative nature of his built work and design proposals into an analytical methodology that he termed, reading the territory. Under the direction of Alison and Peter Smithson, Team X’s agenda and position was informed by a critical discourse among many voices in a fluid and loose affiliation including Aldo Van Eyck, Jaap Bakema, Shadrack Woods, George Candilis, and Giancarlo De Carlo. In debt to Le Corbusier and CIAM and no doubt influenced by the Matera studies, Team X forged a new humanist approach that incorporated many of the ideas prevalent in the post-war Italian polemic (Tafuri 1976). Their approach, echoing De Carlo’s position, was founded on a growing awareness of the importance of social space in combination with a reevaluation of the traditional city as a relevant social and spatial construct. De Carlo advocated that the traditional city continued to be germane in the face of technological change and the economic, social and political realities that constituted post-war Europe. For De Carlo, the city––specifically Matera––would serve as a model. The Italian hill town of Urbino in the Marche region, became a laboratory to explore his findings at Matera. De Carlo was not advocating a return to a traditional architecture or merely rebuilding the city––depopulated by war and its aftermath––but rather a critical discourse with history and place (Pedret 2013, 204). This discourse would center around an examination of the structure, terrain, land-form, scale, physical condition, and identity of the city-region. The city itself, rooted in its particular relationship to place and region, provided the critical framework for the integration of new programs and construction. The city would be adapted, as it always had, to the ongoing changes in human needs while providing the fundamental structure and identity for human inhabitation of the environment. At this juncture the reconsideration of De Carlo’s built work will provide insight that is not apparent or fully formed within his writings––especially those that have appeared in English. This will enable us to better grasp his architectural language and continued value of his contributions. It is the purpose of this paper to draw from De Carlo’s built works in Urbino in order to further understand his search for a place-based architecture. For De Carlo, design was a complex practice of back and forth negotiations between the situation (city-region) and provisional design responses, each tested through a continued analytical process. Using a modern architectural language he sought continuity between place and built form––form that was adaptable and yet provided a clear structure for continued change while maintaining and reinforcing the identity of a place. Architecture for De Carlo needed to be both logically rooted in its place and thoroughly modern––committed to addressing current social conditions and needs (McKean 2004, 10). 2.0 MODEL In addition to the Matera “experiment,”2 BBPR’s Torre Velasca in Milan3, Florentine “repristination” along the Arno (Mayernik 2009, 278), and IgnaZio Gardella’s Casa Cicogna alle Zattere in Venice (Gregotti 1968), stand out for their contribution to the post-war debate. De Carlo’s text, Urbino: The History of a City and Plans for its Development (1964), was his measured contribution to the polemic.4 The prolonged focus on Matera––from the initial Study Group to the final construction of new settlements and the social, economic, political and ethical questions that accompanied each step––attracted international attention and provided an important focus to the debate. For De Carlo, the intangible outcomes were perhaps more critical than the physical construction.5 Matera’s complex spatial and social organiZation rested on a limited number of architectural elements whose patterns of organiZation suggested an underlying place-based logic. These elements––cell, cluster, vicinato (neighborhood courtyard), path, piaZZa, and public buildings––and their underlying order as well as their connectivity to the land, had continued ramifications throughout De Carlo’s career. The lessons from Matera were developed further in the Urbino Report and the subsequent projects in Urbino. The report outlined a practical approach for maintaining the city form and its buildings while addressing the changing economy and social conditions. The report’s analytical investigation of a particular place drew from many of the principles and elemental discoveries that were first uncovered in Matera. Later these were shaped further through his involvement in the Team X circle. Unlike the aforementioned projects, De Carlo’s approach to Urbino directly addressed the deterioration and depopulation of the traditional city. The study concluded that the centro storico and the city–region itself possessed a viable structure and authentic sources or lessons that were “regional and specifically functional rather than universal and canonical” and that could guide its continued development (McKean 2004,11).6 The historical city was considered neither a collection of artifacts nor a museum. Instead, the history and fabric of the traditional city was understood as an important aspect of the present condition that had to be considered and incorporated into the continued evolution of its physical form. De Carlo proposed that the city of Urbino be reanimated with new programs that addressed contemporary needs.
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